Western Electric: a Survey of Recent Western Australian Electronic Music
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Edith Cowan University Research Online Sound Scripts 2005 Western Electric: A survey of recent Western Australian electronic music Lindsay Vickery Follow this and additional works at: https://ro.ecu.edu.au/csound Part of the Interdisciplinary Arts and Media Commons, and the Music Commons Refereed papers from the Inaugural Totally Huge New Music Festival Conference, This Conference Proceeding is posted at Research Online. https://ro.ecu.edu.au/csound/5 Western Electric: A survey of recent Western Australian electronic music Lindsay Vickery La Salle-SIA College of the Arts, Singapore Abstract This paper surveys developments in recent Western Australian electronic music through the work of a number of representative artists in a range of internationally recognised genres. The article follows specific cases of practitioners in the fields of Sound Art (Alan Lamb and Hannah Clemen), live and interactive electronics (Jonathan Mustard and Lindsay Vickery) and noise/lo-fi electronics (Cat Hope and Petro Vouris) and glitch/electronica (Dave Miller and Matt Rösner). Like all Australian states Western Australia has a comparatively large land mass which has developed a highly centralized population (over 75% of inhabitants) in its capital city Perth. As a result this paper is principally a survey of recent activity in Perth, rather than the whole state. Perth is also rather peculiar, being a medium-sized city (roughly 1.5 million) that is separated from other similarly sized centres by four to five hours by air. This paper will consider some of the possible effects of this isolation in the context of the development of a range of practices and methods in electronic music that reflect similar directions elsewhere in the world. I have chosen a cross section of eight artists working across a range of genres that all utilise electronics as a fundamental component of their work. The paper is a companion in some respects to my article for the journal Organised Sound (2001).1 Any survey of activities in provincial city must first consider the problem of documentation. Australia itself is a provincial country with a population of predominantly European origins, traditions and outlook. Despite the existence of many innovative artists working in a range of New Music and experimental music genres, publications on the work of Australian composers and sound artists is relatively poorly documented. Perth faces a double difficulty, being both a minor subset of this problem (with 8% of the countrys population), as well as being out of sight and mind of the other principal population centres that are for the most part situated (by Australian standards) relatively close to one another. This paper is intended to redress a lack of printed material on the developments of Western Australian composers and sound artists working with electronics. Since my last article the problem of documentation has been somewhat redressed through an increasing number of articles published by artists on their own work notably in the Australasian Computer Music Journal and conference proceedings such as this one (see Appendix below). There has also been an increasing trend for composers and sound artists to appear on the radar now through collaboration with artists working in fields that have a stronger tradition of documentation such as the visual arts (where the artwork is less ephemeral) and sciences. Finally, the ubiquitous internet increasingly provides evidence of the activities of artists both above and underground. The problem with internet of course is that the searcher must know what is being searched for. This is the reason that a paper such as this is perhaps only possible for someone with inside knowledge of the scene such as myself. The negative side of such proximity is of course personal bias (and perhaps a tendency to overrate ones own contributions). So it is should be with these warnings in mind dear reader, but with the knowledge that this flawed reflection might be one of very few to be found, that, if you will, you proceed. Sound Art Alan Lamb Alan Lamb is probably Western Australias best-known sound artist. His principal medium is the meticulously recorded vibration of very long wires. Although this phenomenon was first noticed at the very beginning of the telegraphic era,2 and has been explored by others such as the American composer Alvin Sound Scripts: Proceedings of the Inaugural Totally Huge New Music Festival Conference 2005, 24 vol. 1 (2006) Lucier, Lamb has however examined “wire music” almost exclusively and to an unprecedented extent over some twenty years. Luciers work “Music on a Long Thin Wire” (1965) explored the complex and unpredictable nature of the long wires as a musical installation in an informal way: When I started making the piece, I just didnt bother to do any analysis or learning about the wire tension, mass and weight. I just set it up between a couple of tables and discovered that the imperfection of the way it was installed made a very interesting and wonderful sound. It was always changing. Thats the interesting thing about it—it isnt fixed like a string on a piano. Its subject to all kind of internal and external things.3 The vibrations in Luciers wire were driven by an electromagnet (the inversion of the guitar string and pick- up configuration). In contrast Lambs recordings predominantly document the natural vibrations of wires, and a finished work may be based on forty hours or so of “field recordings.” His earliest site dating from the mid 1970s was a set of abandoned telegraph wires in Western Australias the Great Southern region. He has had numerous other sites over the years, by necessity removed as much as possible from the hum of human activity. Typically recordings are made over long periods while Lamb is camped nearby, facilitating numerous experiments with different recording techniques and opportunities to sample the wires under varied atmospheric conditions. The recordings are then catalogued by Lamb, before their assemblage into large scale sound works of often vastly varied character. Lambs wire music has been documented relatively thoroughly,4 however the sounds themselves seem mercifully resistant to reinterpretation. Lamb also takes an “open source” approach to his recordings, making them available to other artists. But despite being appropriated (in the most well intentioned way) by artists of Ambient music, New Age, improvisation and New Music persuasions (myself included) and completely reinterpreted from scratch (Night Passage Demixed),5 Lambs recordings retain an irreducible “essence” (as Pierre Schaeffer would term it) which is a testament to his success in capturing the raw, primal quality of these sounds minus the artists ego. “Wire music” continues to be a unique contribution to the soundscape, and its curious affinity with the Australian outback also remains one of the key qualities in its international profile. The recent inclusion of Lambs assemblages in a film about the notorious “backpacker murders” attests to its evocative and perhaps unnerving connection with the Australian outback.6 Lamb has gradually shifted his working methods from analogue to digital, and even shifted on occasion from laborious studio mixing to create his work in real-time via a collaboration with British sampling violinist Kaffe Matthews. He was a featured artist at Melbournes Liquid Architecture Festival in 2005, where his work was diffused by Philip Samartzis, and Lams unique compositions are likely to been causing ears to prick up for some time to come. Hannah Clemen Hannah Clemens work has followed a very logical path towards what might be seen as the very heart of the musical experience. Her early works inhabited a sound world not dissimilar from much New Music chamber music, influenced most perhaps by Ligeti. They rapidly evolved toward a more general exploration of musical texture and an increasing dialogue with the effect upon the audience of acoustical phenomena. This enquiry became closely linked to her extra-musical interest in meditation and associated religious practices, culminating in A-che Lha-mo (2000) for two clarinets, pre-recorded CD and live effects processing and sample triggering. The composer writes: A-che Lha-mo represents the evolution of an individuals consciousness from the intellectual to the intuitive, and how clarity of thought emerges when the scattered fragments of the “thinking” mind are united.7 The work included quasi-ritualistic elements in the positioning and movement of the performers, some of which were unrealisable for the first performance. Their absence however, drew Clemen on towards a more consistent and thorough investigation of the roles of composer, performer and audience in sound work. In particular the non-participatory, non-interactive nature of the audience/performer relationship. The works that followed increasingly sought to dissolve the barrier between audience and performer. This direction in music was perhaps implied by the works of Cage (or even Ives), but currently perhaps one of the best Sound Scripts: Proceedings of the Inaugural Totally Huge New Music Festival Conference 2005, 25 vol. 1 (2006) known exponents is American Pauline Oliveros (1932-present). It is not surprising then that Clemen has gravitated toward Oliveros work and research and attended workshops offered by her Deep Listening Foundation. Belly Breathe, Belly Brain (2002) and Pillars of Sleep (2002) created for visual artist Sarah Douglas installation contrappunto v (2002) began this evolution.